23 December 2010

Kingfisher Calendar 2011

Take a look at the 12 sizzling hotties who've made it to the coveted Kingfisher Calendar for 2011:

The final calendar shot for the month of January on Kingfisher Calendar 2011. (Pic Courtesy: Kingfisher Calendar 2011)

Lisa Hayden poses for the month of February on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of March on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

Lisa Hayden's final calendar shot for the month of May on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

Charlette's final calendar shot for the month of June on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

Angela's final calender shot for the month of July on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of August on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of September on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of October on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of November on Kingfisher Calendar 2011.

The final calendar shot for the month of December on Kingfisher Calendar 2011

Paris Hilton Naked is Most Watched Video

Paris Hilton naked is most watched video

The video, which was unintentional, has become the most watched clip for the second consecutive year after it surfaced in 2007, the Sun reported.

The second place was taken by a video of actress Lindsay Lohan doing a topless turn in the 'Machete' trailer, and actress Gemma Atkinson's flesh-flashing lesbian romp in the 'Boogie Woogie' promo came third.

Actress Pamela Anderson's early morning welcome for the iPhone alarm was fourth, and footage from socialite Kim Kardashian's sex tape took fifth place.

The top ten most watched showbiz videos are:

1 New Paris sex tape
2 Lindsay Lohan topless
3 Gemma Atkinson topless
4 Wake Up With Sexy Pam
5 Kim Kardashian sex tape
6 Mariah's the breast
7 Pink falls on stage
8 Kendra sex tape
9 Megan's phone pic's too Foxy
10 Megan smoulders for Armani

Source: The Indian Express

It's Here: Mahindra's New Jeep ‘Thar’

Mahindra & Mahindra has announced the launch of 4X4 off-roader the Thar CRDe

It's here: Mahindra's new Jeep

Thar CRDe 4x4 BS IV variant priced at Rs 5.99 lakh (ex-showroom Delhi) and Thar DI BS III variant priced at Rs 4.47 lakh (ex-showroom Jaipur).

The Thar will be launched in Delhi, Chandigarh, Bangalore, Mangalore and Jaipur by December-end and the rest of India by January 2011, M&M Chief Executive (Automotive Division) Rajesh Jejurikar said.

The Thar aims to play a significant role in shaping the lifestyle vehicle segment both in urban and rural India.

"Having realised the potential of this emerging segment of off-road enthusiasts and lifestyle seekers, we have launched the Thar in India. The Thar is an extension of our legacy and what Mahindra stands for," Jejurikar said.

The much awaited 4x4 off-roader is being launched in India and is targeted at the off-roading enthusiasts, retro look seekers & people wanting to make a unique style statement.

A long time coming!

The company has spent Rs 5 crore for development of the Thar and it will be distributed through 200 outlets across the country, Jejurikar said.

Consumers today are looking for a different lifestyle, as they seek adventure and a fun experience which the Thar will offer. With the retro look back in vogue, the Thar is all set to chart a new terrain in the Indian automobile industry.

"The Thar is a manual 4x4 machine coupled with a powerful CRDe engine 77 kw (105 BHP) & drive by wire technology which is capable of providing it variable speeds and acceleration.

To handle this excess power, THAR CRDe's tough rigid ladder frame chassis has been optimised to enable crisp handling.

Modern suspension layout of IFS and abuse resistant rear leaf springs delivers a great balance between ride and handling," M&M Chief Executive (TPDS) Rajan Wadhera said.

The Thar is also available with a DI engine as a base variant. The Thar DI will be positioned as a lifestyle vehicle for the rural market with both two and four wheel drive options.

Tech Specs

Engine: NEF CRDe Turbocharged Intercooled, BS IV
Capacity: 2498 CC
Bore x Stroke: 94 x 90 mm
Power: 77.23 kW
Torque: 247 Nm @ 1800-2000 rpm

Tech Specs

Transmission: 5 Speed - Manual
Transfer case (4WD only): Borg Warner - Manual Shift, 2-Speed gear reduction - HIGH 1.0:1, LOW 2.48:1

Minimum turning radius: 5.25 m

Wheelbase: 2430 mm

Tech Specs

Suspension: Independent Front Suspension with Torsion & Stabiliser Bar, Semi elliptical leaf springs with tension sides shot penned

Ground clearance: 200 mm
Approach angle: 46º
Departure angle: 30º

Tech Specs

Tyres: P 235/70 R 16 Tubeless Tyres
Wheels: 6.5 J X 16 Inches (40.64 cms)

Fuel tank capacity: 60 Litres

Seating Capacity: 7 Seater

Technology

- Advanced CRDe engine measures every bit of fuel and combines performance with economy without polluting environment
- Drive by wire technology aids in quicker and controlled throttle response
- LSPV brakes aids in preventing wheel lock up and loss of control

Style

- Classic looking MM540 body with Jeep's lineage and grill
- Unmistakable Jeep identity to the vehicle makes it special and good looking
- Tough steel body for extended durability

Safety

- Powerful 9 inch booster with disc brakes in front and drum in rear
- 4wd high / low ratio for superior all weather and terrain traction

Comfort & Convenience

- Independent front suspension for outstanding ride and handling
- Integral power steering with car-like turning radius of 5.25 m
- Compact dimension of a small car for easy parking
- Removable top for wind-in-the-hair experience

Off road ability

- Comes with BorgWarner 4wd system as standard fitment
- 2.48 ratio low range gearbox to tackle toughest situations and loads
- High approach and departure angles to climb over impossible obstacles
- Long travel suspension for all time superior traction

Source: India Syndicate
Photos: Mahindra

Aizawl Registers 1848 Vehicles After Garage Law

congestion in aizawl_thumb[1]Aizawl, Dec 23 : As many as 1848 vehicles have been registered in this district till November after the garage law come into existence on September one.

Meanwhile, with the government's assurance of enlarged garage inspection squad yet to be materialised, shortage of manpower has troubled the inspectors.

At present, there are only five inspectors for Aizawl, who cover the entire city and towns within the state capital district.

The inspectors are not provided with vehicles and they have to move around with their private vehicles to verify garages for the newly registered vehicles in the entire district with the mere 20 litres of petrol provided by the government for the purpose.

As a result, a number of vehicles have been left unregistered due to the inspectors' inability to verify their garages, sources said.

The Mizoram government has made it mandatory for all vehicles owners to have garage to get their vehicles registered. The order, which came into effect from September first, also directed all the already registered vehicle owners to have garages before December 15.

4 Yr Old HIV+ Child Starved, Abandoned in Assam

Guwahati, Dec 23 : After her mother died from AIDS two months ago, a four-year-old girl in Assam was entrusted to her paternal uncle and aunt who live about 60 kilometres away from Guwahati in Lower Assam.

Two weeks ago, she was discovered by an NGO in a shed along with goats. She was made to eat from their bowl. She weighed less than eight kilograms.  

The NGO brought her  to a community centre in Guwahati, where people living with HIV are taken care of.

Rules set  the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) state that she cannot stay at this community centre for more than 15 days.

Records show that Assam has 70 orphans who lost their parents to AIDS. What makes their situation worse is that they are HIV positive as well, which means that they cannot be sent to regular orphanages.

Based on this child's story on NDTV, the Assam Chief Minister has promised to set up a special shelter for others like her, or for those who are HIV positive and  have nowhere to go.

Chief Minister Gogoi has also told NDTV that the four year old will stay at the centre run by NACO till alternative arrangements are available.   

Assamese Immigrants Struggle to Redefine Identity

As people flow from India's Assam to Bangladesh, debates over migration.

The Assamese struggle to redefine their identity

By Julia E. Evans and Taarika C. Sridhar (Tufts Univ.)

Students from B.Baruah College intently listen to authors talk about their experience in interacting with the char villagers. (Taarika Sridhar)

ASSAM, India — In the northeast pocket of India lies Assam, an exclave famous for its tea gardens and the Brahmaputra River. Since the 1947 partition of India and Pakistan, and the 1971 independence of Bangladesh, there has been an escalating flow of people between Assam and Bangladesh. The consequence is an increasing debate over migration, and strenuous arguments over what constitutes the Assamese identity.

Local Assamese define themselves as Assamese due to their deep ancestral roots in the land, whereas Bangladeshi immigrants consider themselves Assamese after 30 to 50 years of living and working in the state.

The identity politics crisis results from the rising numerical and political strength of these industrious Bangladeshi immigrants, whom the local Assamese perceive as a threat to the Assamese heritage, way of living, and, most importantly, the Assam identity.

This summer, we traveled to Assam to investigate these questions of identity. We started our journey in Dibrugarh, a city in Upper Assam, which is relatively isolated from identity politics because of its physical distance from the border. However, the debate on Assamese identity remains salient, largely due to the state’s flourishing media.

In conversations at The Sentinel, one of two state-wide English newspapers, local journalists gave us their opinions on current immigration issues. According to reporters Ikbal Ahmed and Subhalakshmi Gogoi, the rising numbers in immigrant populations poses an imminent threat to local political identity.

“By number, they want to make it a Greater Bangladesh,” said Ahmed in a concerned tone. He further explained that the sheer numbers of immigrants encourage politicians to view the immigrant communities as vote banks, diminishing the political voice of the local Assamese. Representing the newspaper’s motto, “Of this land, For its people,” these journalists are charged to inform their readers about issues affecting their political identity.

As we moved into the char villages in Lower Assam, the immigrant communities there presented a stark contrast to Dibrugarh’s mainland setting. Chars are sedimentary islands within the Brahmaputra River, inhabited mostly by immigrant populations dependent on the fertile soil for their livelihoods.

Upon asking villagers whether they consider themselves Assamese, we received confused looks. “I am Assamese,” answered Akel Ali without hesitation. This is a man whose family had moved to Assam before 1950, making the idea of questioning his identity perplexing. Akel’s reaction was not a solitary one. We consistently came across such straightforward responses.

Questions of identity are not a top-of-mind concern of the char villagers. Their concerns involve more simple, short-term needs. As Mohammad Ali, a villager from Gaitapu Island, told us, “All I want is a water pump for my field.” The char’s simple nature was always evident in its bare infrastructure, as well as in conversations with villagers.

During our visit to a char named Moira Challi, we met Jahana Begum, a 20-year-old mother who had received an education only up to the third grade. When discussing her affinity to the state, her lack of education became clear; she did not even know that she lived in a state called Assam. Her only concern was that her family be provided with basic living services from the government — whatever government that might be.

This concern about basic needs, compounded by the lack of education, makes these immigrant populations vulnerable to political exploitation. State politicians depend on the villagers’ limited understanding of civil society and democracy to secure the communities as vote banks. By offering short-term promises of development, politicians appeal to the immediate needs of the villagers and thus gain large numbers of votes.

Yet the reality is that char voters receive much less in terms of social services than the voters of mainland Assam. Government investment in infrastructure remains minimal.

Most islands do not have a school or medical facility. Children often have to walk more than eight kilometers for schooling.

Jahana Begum and other char villagers are also isolated from all forms of media. They do not have access to newspapers, radios or televisions. “I have to travel regularly to the mainland to get information on what is happening in the state,” said Maqbool Hussain, the headmaster of an elementary school in Gaitapu Island.

The pattern of immigrants being used as vote banks highlights the popular mainland fear of Assam becoming a Greater Bangladesh. Since the immigrants live on the periphery of Assamese civil society, they continue to vote as a block, innocently unaware of the perceived threat they pose to mainland Assamese.

The disconnection between the local Assamese and Bangladeshi immigrants (who assert themselves as Assamese) is rooted in the common misperception of the political agenda of char villagers. Geography and paranoia sustained by the media such as The Sentinel limits interaction between the two groups and perpetuates the divide.

There is little to no movement of people from the mainland to the chars, making it difficult for each group to understand the others’ situation. Ajay, a student from B.Baruah College in the capital city, explained, “There is no objective voice. The same stories on immigration repeat themselves again and again. We don’t know what is right or wrong from both the media and politicians’ perspectives.”

Without face-to-face interaction and discussion, finding a common “Assamese” identity would appear to be unobtainable, at least in the short-term.

However, not all Assamese are pessimistic regarding the debate about immigrants and identity. “We want to understand, and we want to help,” was Ajay’s response to our questions on the future of Assamese identity. He and his friends from college explained their ideas for a project targeted towards char village communities. They said their project could be a means to promote interaction between students and immigrant char populations.

We heard a similar openness and idealism in the voices of young boys in the chars. Momin Ali, an eighth-grade student, told of his ideas for change: “I want to complete my education on the mainland. I want to become a politician so I can stop corruption and help develop my char village.”

Momin’s aim is not to impose his identity on politics, as most immigrants are thought to want. His goal is purely altruistic; he aspires to aid the development of his and other char villages.  

While both Ajay and Momin and others like them have these ambitions, they are all at a standstill. They lack the support and means of pursuing either a development project or a political career. Ajay dejectedly complained, “The youths are fragmented here.” On the other side, the reality of Momin’s situation inhibits him from getting a higher education within mainland Assam, thus further limiting his political aspirations.

For Assam to realize its full potential, a harmonious identity is imperative. Despite the way in which the Assamese identity divide has been perpetuated, the youth provide an opportunity to bridge these differences and close the large window of misperceptions.

The first step has yet to be taken — interaction between the mainland and the char. Ajay, Momin and their peers are not completely jaded by the prolonged debate on what constitutes an Assamese identity. They understand that a shift of perspective is necessary.

The youths’ ideals diminish the predominant sense of antagonism, and project a refreshing optimism. Only through the empowerment of the youth can a harmonious Assamese identity evolve.

 

Student Correspondent Corps

Documentary Series On The Enchanting Northeast

A-Naga-tribe-006New Delhi, Dec 23 : The enchanting North Eastern states of India has been caught on film by noted art historian and filmmaker Benoy Behl for his series of documentaries chronicling the life, culture, architecture and traditions of India.

The series on the northeastern states Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Meghalaya, Manipur and Tripura is part of Behl''s "Spectacular India" comprising 52 films that the historian is shooting for Doordarshan.

"I have travelled to the North East before. There are so many wonderful lessons to learn. For example in Nagaland we saw around 1000 different types of leaves that are not only edible but are quite delicious and nutritious.

"In the market place of Nagaland 50 percent of what is sold is forest produce," Behl who returned from a two-month shooting trip to the North East told PTI.

Behl documents the "Lai Haroba" or the ancient dance of Manipur. The people of Mnipur, he says had a unique tradition of worship throughout the ecstasy of dance.

"They believed that they were the descendants of celestial musicians and they sought communion with the Divine through music and dance," he says.

In Tripura, Behl takes viewers through the Unnakoti, a place 178 km north of Agartala and supposed to be the site of deities in the past.

"It''s a fascinating site with the largest Shiva rock -cut reliefs in all of India. The most enchanting as[aspect of this site is its magical setting in the middle of the forest," says the filmmaker.

The historian who has previously photographed various monuments and art heritage across Asia, has also shot the remains of the Pilak Stupa located in a remote part of Tripura. The relief on the base of the stupa represents the Vijrayana school of Buddhism prevalent during the Pala time.

Apart from the North Eastern states, Behl has captured the traditions of the Bauls of West Bengal, who have been included in the Unesco list of world's master pieces of oral and intangible heritage.

"It is quite wonderful that villagers living in such remote places are so deeply versed in philosophy. They are ecstatically eager to lose themselves, to lose their own identity, to see themselves as a part of the greater one," says the filmmaker.

Earlier this year Behl went on a six-week shooting trip covering extensive parts of the Kashmir Valley and the districts of Kargil, Leh, Lahaul-Spiti, Chamba and Kangra, as well as the Government Museums in Shimla and Chandigarh.

The subjects of the films we were shooting this time included the Aryan Tribes in remote parts of Ladakh, Hindu and Buddhist sites of Kashmir, Guru Padmasambhava the Second Buddha and the masked ritual dance of the Lamas.

The "Spectacular India" series from Kashimir to Kanyakumari is expected to be aired on Doordarshan early next year.

Mizoram Baptist Church to Ordain First woman Pastor

65-year-old Hnuni to be ceremoniously elevated to the post next month, marking a first in Mizoram

By Santanu Ghosh

hnuni pastorR.L. Hnuni

Aizawl, Dec 23 : For the first time in the annals of Mizoram Christianity, a woman Church elder belonging to the Baptist denomination is poised to be ordained as pastor.

Though Christianity has been a dominant religion in Mizoram since 1894, no woman has ever adorned the coveted post of pastor in any church in the hill state.

A senior members of the Baptist Church of Mizoram said R.L. Hnuni, 65, would be the first woman to bag the laurels of being adorned as pastor. She is now the principal of the Academy of the Integrated Christian Studies in the capital city of Aizawl.

A senior official of the Mizoram church said Hnuni would be ceremoniously ushered to the post of pastor next month.

The Baptist Church of Mizoram is the apex body of Baptist churches and is the the second largest body of Christian denominations in the state. It stands next to the Presbyterian Church in terms of membership and church goers.

Hnuni, who did advanced studies in Christianity from England, was first nominated to the post by a pastoral committee of the BCM in its two-day conclave in Aizawl this year.

According to the census conducted in 2001, 90 per cent of Mizoram’s total 9.5 lakh population follows Christianity. Mizoram at present is a veritable beehive of different Christian denominations with the Presbyterians topping the list.

The Presbyterians have over 1,000 churches in the eight districts of Mizoram.

The other important church denominations, apart from the Presbyterians and Baptists, are Catholics, Seventh Day Adventists, Pentecoastal Church and the Salvation Army.

Hnuni worked as a lecturer in the theology department of Eastern Theological College in Jorhat from 1981 to 2001. She can also write and speak Assamese.

The entry of a woman pastor in the strictly patriarchal society of the Mizos is a notable event.

Though the Presbyterian Synod in Mizoram boasts of a large number of followers in the state, it has still denied women their share of pastoral roles.

Mizoram, however, has a good number of woman theologians, who serve the church as teachers, coordinators in the women’s desk and in sundry missionary activity.

The Presbyterian Church has installed a separate women’s ministry in the church forum .

Two Welsh missionaries, Savidge and Lorrain, had introduced Christianity in Mizoram, reaching the Lushai hills through Assam’s Cachar district in 1894 and since then the Christian population has rapidly increased in the state.